The Mercury News

Experts warn against plugging in USB devices

If you don’t know where it came from, don’t use it

- By Hamza Shaban The Washington Post

When journalist­s arrived in Singapore for the historic summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un last month, security experts were alarmed by what awaited those who were covering the event. Inside a welcome bag that included bottled water featuring the faces of Trump and Kim and a guide to the local area was something far more suspicious: a miniature fan that connects to a computer’s USB port.

The discovery prompted a security researcher to disassembl­e the fan to inspect the USB. Security experts say that people should never use USB devices without knowing where they come from. Hackers and spies can use them as Trojan horses - devices that seem innocuous but are loaded with malware designed to take control of a target’s computer and steal informatio­n. The summit had attracted journalist­s from all over the world. Since reporters are often in contact USB devices, like fans, may seem harmless, but are a common way for hackers to gain access to computers.

with business and government officials and gather nonpublic informatio­n, their personal devices and newsroom networks could be enticing targets.

Experts say USBs are a common way for hackers to gather informatio­n or infect devices. In 2008, Russian agents planted virus-carrying USB sticks in retail kiosks around NATO headquarte­rs in Kabul, Afghanista­n, to gain access to a classified Pentagon network, according to the New Yorker. In 2013, Italian newspapers alleged that Russian operatives used USB devices to try to spy on world leaders at a G20 summit in St. Petersburg.

Research suggests that average citizens can also become targets. In 2011, the Department of Homeland Security planted USBs and CDs in government parking lots to test the security practices (and susceptibi­lity) of employees and contractor­s. Sixty percent of people who picked up the items plugged them into work computers, and if the disks or USBs had an official logo printed on them the rate shot up to 90 percent. In another experiment conducted at the University of Illinois UrbanaCham­paign in 2016, researcher­s dropped nearly 300 USB sticks on campus and found that nearly half the time someone would pick them up and plug them into their computer.

Sergei Skorobogat­ov, a hardware secruity researcher at the University of Cambridge, tested one of the fans from the summit. In an analysis of the components, Skorobogat­ov said he found no malicious software functional­ity inside the fan. But he was quick to add that people shouldn’t let their guard down when it comes to swag. “However, this does not eliminate the possibilit­y of malicious or Trojan components wired to USB connector in other fans, lamps and other end-user USB devices,” he wrote in the analysis published on his staff website and first reported by ZDNet.

In other words, it’s not a good idea to plug unknown devices into the USB ports of your own devices, Skorobogat­ov said in an interview with The Washington Post. He added that, as in the case of the fans, just because one USB device in a given group is safe, doesn’t mean the rest of them are.

Jake Williams, founder of the cybersecur­ity firm Rendition Infosec and a former member of the National Security Agency’s hacking group, was also circumspec­t about the USB fans. He said that malicious actors could have narrowly targeted one reporter who was of special interest out of 100, meaning that most fans may have appeared harmless even as some might have been used to target specific journalist­s. The extremely small sample size of one fan makes it hard to draw conclusion­s, he said. But on the general practice of using hardware given to you by strangers or found in public places, he was direct, “It’s horrendous­ly bad.”

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